PQA Plus Site Assessment Guide Third-party verification - Upon completion of an on-farm site assessment producers may be contacted to participate in voluntary third party verification. The verification process is identical to the on-farm assessment that is performed by a PQA Plus advisor; however it is completed an unbiased third party who is commissioned by the Pork Checkoff. If your site is selected for a third party verification you will be contacted approximately two weeks prior to the visit.
This system creates a method to identify and track livestock agriculture sites and will help facilitate processes in the event of a disease spread concern. Producers are advised to create premise identification numbers for each individual site. In order to register your premise or to find your premise number you can contact Michigan Department of Agriculture at or online.
On-farm site assessments cannot be completed without a premise identification number. Transport Quality Assurance TQA Assurance Training and Certification - The TQA Assurance program was developed to assist producers, transporters and handlers with evaluating and improving their animal handling and movement skills and transportation protocols.
Funds will augment Medicaid payments. Representatives from the nursing home and health maintenance organizations HMOs provider community and state legislators joined Governor John Engler today to announce that legislation will soon be introduced to establish a new Medicaid Quality Assurance Assessment Program. Funds raised through the assessment will be used to increase the reimbursements paid to nursing homes and HMOs that participate in Michigan's Medicaid program.
I applaud the efforts of these two provider groups — the Health Care Association of Michigan and the Michigan Association of Health Plans -- for working hard to identify ways to maintain quality health care during this difficult financial period.
Additional state funding, however, was not available to increase payments to Medicaid providers. At least 26 states use revenues made available by their medical care provider communities to help finance their Medicaid programs.
Adoption of this financing option in Michigan will allow the state to earn sufficient federal funding to increase Medicaid payments by 5 percent for HMOs and 7 percent for nursing homes. The Michigan Medicaid Quality Assurance Assessment program is comprised of three elements: a uniform provider contribution, Federal matching funds and a Medicaid payment increase.
This represents a 7 percent increase in Medicaid nursing home payments. Federal law requires that these assessments be established in state law. The necessary legislation will soon be introduced to establish this valuable program. Browsers that can not handle javascript will not be able to access some features of this site. Some functions of this site are disabled for browsers blocking jQuery. Close Search Box. Official Website of Michigan.
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